Let’s back up. This was the fourth time I covered a special session since I began covering New Mexico politics full-time in 2008. I have also covered seven regular legislative sessions.

The only special session I missed over the last eight years was the 2015 special session that lasted just hours.

The Senate had already finished all their work on budget bills in about 12 hours from Friday night into Saturday morning then adjourned sine die. The Senate went home, and the House couldn’t force them to come back until the following Thursday.

After taking a day off on Tuesday, the House went back to the state capitol Wednesday—then promptly spent more time behind closed doors in caucus meetings than debating bills on the floor.

At one point Wednesday afternoon, House Republicans paused mid-debate on a budget bill to caucus. They then stayed behind doors in caucus for hours.

House and Senate Democrats said House Republicans should have focused on budget bills instead of the crime bills that gained relatively quick passage through the chamber.

All of them passed quickly except the bill to bring back the death penalty. This was the one crime bill left for the House’s to pass as Wednesday night turned into Thursday morning during floor debate. At the time, the House had just finished debate on a critical bill to cut spending throughout the state to balance a pending budget deficit.

At 12:45 a.m., House Republicans announced they would leave the regular calendar, with several more budget bills on tap, and move to a supplemental calendar with just one item: The reinstatement of the death penalty.

Here’s where it turned from a long, slightly unusual floor session into a long, very unusual and surreal floor session.

Minutes before she took over as one of three expert witnesses on the death penalty bill, Department of Public Safety General Counsel Amy Orlando decided it l would a good time to take a selfie.

The other expert witnesses, 5th Judicial District Attorney Dianna Luce and 12th Judicial District Attorney John Sugg, joined in on the House floor selfie, along with State Rep. Monica Youngblood, R-Albuquerque. Youngblood sponsored the death penalty legislation.

Democrats and critics of the death penalty widely ridiculed the selfie, sharing it repeatedly on social media in the early morning hours of Thursday.

Youngblood would have to wait for two hours to actually debate the death penalty, while her expert witnesses sat behind her, waiting.

Instead of immediate debate on the death penalty bill at 12:45 a.m., Democrats spent two hours debating whether or not the House should even take up the death penalty bill so early in the morning.

Democrats argued that House leadership failed to give legislators in the minority and, more importantly, the public no advance notice on bringing up the death penalty bill. Instead, they argued that the House should go back to the regular calendar and take up budget issues.

Democrats eventually lost their appeal of the House Speaker’s ruling to debate the death penalty. After three hours of debate, the House ended up passing the death penalty bill on a party-line vote.

The House would end up passing more budget bills and working until 7 a.m.

Like his predecessors, House Speaker Don Tripp, R-Socorro, habitually thanks members of the public in the gallery at the end of each floor session. But after the floor session ended this time, Tripp noted that no members of the public were watching in the gallery.

Roundhouse staffers who went home the previous evening came back to a stream of bleary-eyed legislators exiting the building as the sun rose on Thursday morning. Legislators had time for a change of clothes, a shower and maybe a quick nap before returning by 11 a.m.

Later Thursday morning, the Senate returned to the Roundhouse, agreed with the House’s changes on the budget bills, and ignored the crime bills. Both chambers adjourned, went home and the seven-day special session, as quickly as it began, was over.

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This week the U.S. Supreme Court will hear arguments on whether the Federal Civil Rights Act applies to gay, lesbian, and transgender Americans. It currently bans discrimination based on sexual orientation and gender identity for employment and housing.

Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham signed a bill into law Friday that protects working mothers and new moms from discrimination in the workplace. HB 25, or the Pregnant Worker Accommodation Bill, amends the state’s Human Rights Act to make pregnancy, childbirth and conditions related to either a protected class from employment discrimination.

Gov. Susana Martinez signed a bill passed during the recently-completed legislative special session that cut spending in most state agencies, but used her line-item veto authority to spare “below-the-line” funding for the Public Education Department. The bill was part of the effort to solve a budget problem that is estimated to leave the state hundreds of millions of dollars in the hole.

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Matthew Reichbach is the editor of the NM Political Report. The former founder and editor of the NM Telegram, Matthew was also a co-founder of New Mexico FBIHOP with his brother and one of the original hires at the groundbreaking website the New Mexico Independent. Matthew has covered events such as the Democratic National Convention and Netroots Nation and formerly published, “The Morning Word,” a daily political news summary for NM Telegram and the Santa Fe Reporter.